"In this sticky web that we're all in, behaving decently is no small task." -- Novelist Stacey D'Erasmo

Friday, December 14, 2018

What Do We Lie About?

     B had cataract surgery the other day. She's fine. But I think she's still suffering a little bit from the sedative they gave her. And I have a cold, so I'm a little disoriented not only from the bugs running around in my body, but also from the DayQuil, NyQuil, cough drops, vitamin C, echinacea and other pills and potions I'm consuming.

     So we're both a little loopy. Other than that, I don't know how the topic came up, but over dinner we were trying to list the things that people lie about the most.

     My top three were:

     How much sex you have (and how good it was). Well, you can lie to your friends, but you can't lie to your spouse, at least not about the quantity.

     How much money you win at gambling. More on that in a minute.

     And how long your commute really is. I had several different jobs during my career, but the one I held the longest involved an eight-minute commute. I didn't have to lie about my commute. But when I took the train to the city, involving a 39-minute ride on the express train, everyone in town said their commute was, oh, 40 or 45 minutes. But you have to get to the train, wait for the train, and then get to the office after you get off the train. Believe me, it took at least an hour. And that doesn't count the times you missed the express and had to take the local, or the train was late due to weather, mechanical problems or just plain incompetency in the ranks of conductors, engineers or paper pushers. And don't even get me started on people who drive to work and the traffic problems they encounter but fail to account for. Everyone believes that their commute to work is shorter than it really is.

     Now I remember how the topic came up. We were at a wedding and meeting up with a lot of old friends, catching up on what they are doing. But we didn't find out what her son's friend Robbie is doing. Later, however, B talked to her son, and found out that what he is doing is ... day trading.

     Trying to make a living day trading? Otherwise known as gambling? Was he kidding?

     But my brother-in-law also does some day trading. He's been doing it for years. According to him, he just does small-time stuff. Acts on a tip now and then. And he makes, "Oh, I dunno, maybe a few thousand dollars a year."

     I once asked his wife, my sister, about this. Her response? Yeah, he loses about five thousand dollars a year. But I don't let it worry me. It gives him something to do, keeps him out of trouble, and it costs less than taking a two-week vacation, which we hardly ever do anymore.

     Which reminded me of the time I went to the track with some friends. One of the guys professed to be an expert in betting at the track. He knew the horses, he knew the odds, he knew how the whole thing worked.

     So everyone in our party gave him $50. He would be in charge of the betting. We saw maybe four or five races, I forget exactly. I believe one of our horses came in, but most of them were in the back of the pack. At the end of the day our friend gave us each $28. "See," he said. "We each won twenty eight dollars!"

     I don't know if he was lying to us, or if he was lying to himself. Or if he was just kidding. But see what I mean about the lying?

     Meanwhile, B's top three lies were:

     How much money you spent at the mall. This may be lying to your spouse to avoid an argument. Or, it could be lying to yourself, so you don't feel so bad.

     How great a time you had on vacation. Especially with facebook, nobody will admit, even to themselves, that they've just spent a fortune going to Europe or Hawaii or the beach or the mountains and didn't have good time. They remember the sunny days and the gorgeous sights, but not the delays at the airport, the overheated hotel room, the strange stomach bug they picked up, or the time they got ripped off by a vendor.

     How cute your grandchildren are. Every grandparent thinks their grandchild is the cutest. They can't all be right, can they?

     Although I remember when I had my own daughter. The nurse brought me to the nursery to show me my little girl -- this was back in the days when they did it that way. There were eight or ten babies in the nursery. But the nurse didn't have to tell me which one was mine -- because I could see that my little girl was the cutest baby in the nursery.

     Later, I saw my wife, and she asked me if I'd seen the baby. And I told her, yes, I'd seen her and she was the cutest, the prettiest baby in the nursery, and probably the smartest too. There was a different nurse in the room at the time, and I heard her chuckle and mumble under her breath, "Yeah, all the dads say that."

     I heard her, and so I looked over at the nurse and then at my wife, lying there in bed with a big grin on her face, and I said to the woman, "You're correct. All the dads do say that. But, you know, one of those dads is right. And I'm the dad who is right -- our daughter is the cutest baby in the nursery."

     Lies? What lies?

19 comments:

Tabor said...

Let me think...my three lies...used to be sex, but now probably how much I weigh, how much I donate (telling hubby it is less than he thinks), how much fun I had on some family outing. (Or how good the grandkids behaved.) But that is four. Making me out to be a bigger liar.

Florence said...

Weight
Money
Polite little lies

DUTA said...

People tend to lie , to themselves and to others, about their health.
They'll say they are healthy although they're on meds.
No, they're not healthy. The meds help them function and control their problem but not cure it, and they shouldn't ignore or forget that.

Linda Myers said...

How I'll reimburse the bank account for the extra I spent on travel
How often I'll exercise this week.
"The Bank of Mom is closed."

Actually, I think these are my plans. They wouldn't be lies if I said, "This is my plan."

Barbara said...

Hahaha. Love this. Going to make a cup of tea and figure out my top 3.

Tom said...

Lie about health? Maybe, although it seems people our age do more complaining than lying about their health. But exercise? Definitely, and that's certainly related to health. And weight, too.

DUTA said...

Exercise is indeed very important to health in general, but weight is another matter. Excercise has little to offer in terms of weightloss/weight maintenance. I say this mainly from personal experience. What really helps with weight is a low-calorie food intake and the 7-8 hours of sleep (Sleep is a great metabolic booster). All the other things are myths, misconceptions, and even waste of time and money.

Janette said...

"bank of mom is closed" is high on my list
I do lie about my weight to the DMV- but I don't think it is their business. Any police officer can tell that I am WAY too heavy. No one else asks and so I don't have to lie to them.
I don't mind getting up early is my constant one.


Olga said...

When my daughter was a teenager, she got on a real tear about the lies I told her over the years, but after she had kids of her own she admitted that she couldn't help herself either. Kids ask so many questions. Parents can't possibly know all the answers. It's just an invitation to make stuff up in my way of thinking.

Anonymous said...

I was brought up Catholic so if I lie, I'll go to hell....and I don't want that.

DJan said...

How much something I bought cost (I always downplay it to my hubby).
My bedtime (it's way earlier than I like to admit).
My age (but I don't lie about it all that often).

Celia said...

How tasty other people's cooking is. Still like my own cooking best.
How much exercise I get.
Like Tabor, how well-behaved my grandkids are :-)

gigihawaii said...

Well, one way to stop lying is to stop talking to people. That always works.

Diane Dahli said...

My husband's top three lies involve exercise (or lack thereof), weight (he's always losing, but never gets there) and food (how much he doesn't eat when he goes out with the guys)—as you can tell, I'm an authority on HIS lies! Don't ask me about mine—I'm not likely to tell you!

Anonymous said...

My aunt who lived to 100 was brutally honest..She had tons of money but few people could stand to be around her..She left inheritances to many who just sucked up to her for her money, they never thought she would live that long..I did I always told her what I thought and never asked for one dime..My relative called right after I got out of the hospital for kidney stones to tell me of his money yadda yadda I stopped him cold by saying, you must have me confused with someone who actually cared about you & her..you are both the same and clicked the phone..people who are brutally honest are full of you know what and I am happily poor and even happier to listen to others and not make judgements and say one dadblasted word to upset them..happy holidays...just saying~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Bob Lowry said...

My three (out of several)

How often I go to the gym
How much time I spend on the computer each day
How I feel much younger than my actual age.

David @ iretiredyoung said...

I'm normally quite good, but now and again, how many drinks I had last night is perhaps estimated a little on the low side (at least compared to the headache that I might have)😎

Wisewebwoman said...

Big whopper for me when I drank was how much I drank.

Gamblers always lie - it's now called arbitrage.

Do I lie now? I have to think about that.

I lie when I don't want to go someplace and speak of "calendar conflicts."

Can't think of any others right now but I'm sure I will.

XO
WWW

Rebecca Olkowski said...

My biggest is when I would go shopping. Usually, I would sneak the package into the house so there were no questions asked about what I bought.